Seested v. Post Printing & Publishing Co.

31 S.W.2d 1045, 326 Mo. 559, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 670
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 14, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 31 S.W.2d 1045 (Seested v. Post Printing & Publishing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seested v. Post Printing & Publishing Co., 31 S.W.2d 1045, 326 Mo. 559, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 670 (Mo. 1930).

Opinion

*565 RAGLAND, J.

Action for libel. The petition alleged that on November 2, 1921, the defendant was the owner and publisher of a newspaper, known as the Kansas City Post, then of a general circulation of over 150,000 copies in Kansas iCity, Jackson County, Missouri, and throughout the United States, and that on said date defendant published in said newspaper of and concerning the plaintiff the following defamatory article:

“The Post feels that it would be remiss in its duties if it did not again call attention, now that the great American Legion convention is closing, to the pro-German record of August Frederick Seested, general manager of the Kansas City Star1, in the front yard of which the reviewing stand for the Legion’s distinguished visitors was erected.
“The Post has told how Seested lived in this country forty yeai’s and never deemed it necessary to become naturalized until he was threatened with internment and his property was in danger of being seized by the alien enemy property custodian after we entered the war.
(<It now desires to complete the case against Seested by reproducing reeqrds of Seested’s contributions to the kaiser’s war chest, ^yhich are pn file ip |he government archives at Washington,
*566 “These records show that Seested contributed at least $26,000, and that his brother Frank Seested, circulation manager of the Star, also gave to the imperial German Government $11,000.
“This information which has been in our possession since last week, was obtained when the department of justice, the intelligence department of the army, and the American Protective League seized the papers of those arch conspirators, Yon Papen, Yon Bernstorff and Yon Igel, when they were trying to embroil us with Mexico and were conducting a campaign of destruction in our munition plants.
“One entry in the records of the heads of the German spy and propaganda organization in this country deals with the $26,000 contributed by August Frederick Seested and another with the $11,000 contribution of his brother.
“The entry concerning August Frederick Seested, obtained and copied, reads:
“ ‘Seested, August F., general manager Kansas City Star, $26,000.
“ ‘Data Sep. pymnts.
“ ‘Md vi vb vppn.’
“Government investigators interpreted the entry to mean that Seested had contributed $26,000, and that the payment for September, year not given, had been made to Yon Bernstorff, Yon Papen and Yon Igel, the initials being interpreted as follows:
“ ‘Md — Made
“ ‘Yi — Von Igel
“ ‘Yb — -Yon Bernstorff
“ ‘Vppn — Von Papen’
“The entry concerning Frank Seested is the same except for the amount.
“How did it happen that Kansas City permitted the reviewing-stand to be erected at the Star, and Marshal Foch and General Pershing to be housed at the home of the Star’s owner?
“The Post can only explain that Kansas City knew nothing about it until the last minute — that the plans were made secretly through the connivance of the local convention committee’s chairman and kept secret until one wTeek ago, and until after the reviewing stand was partly built.
“Why did not the Post give out the damnable indictment against Seested during the convention? Plainly and bluntly, because we were unwill'ng to ruin the convention, prevent the parade, and perhaps incite a riot. Anybody who knows the legion knows its explosive character. ’ ’

The petition was filed November 19, 1921, to the December term, 1921, of the Circuit Court of Jackson County. As originally filed it alleged that defendant in publishing the article just mentioned intended, among other things, to cause it to be believed that plaintiff *567 "was guilty of the crime of treason,” and by way of innuendo it further alleged that the meaning conveyed by the article was that plaintiff was an ‘ ‘ arch traitor. ’ ’ The defendant answered, admitting that it owned and published the newspaper 'known as the Kansas City Post and that it published in its said newspaper on the date mentioned in the petition the article set out therein, but denying all other allegations. Shortly before the trial, at the November term, 1926, plaintiff by leave of court amended his petition by striking out the allegations that the defamatory article was intended to convey, and did convey, the meaning that plaintiff was guilty of the crime of treason, and that he was a traitor, and by inserting in lieu of the allegations so stricken out others to the effect that the article meant and charged that, plaintiff was disloyal to the United States,, that it branded him with disloyalty. To the petition as so amended the defendant refiled its answer to the original petition. The answer did not attempt to justify the publication, nor did it set forth any matter in mitigation.

The facts which the evidence on the part of the plaintiff tended to show may be briefly summarized as follows-.

August Frederick Seested, mentioned in the publication complained of, and his brother Frank, the plaintiff, were born in Tun-don, a small town in Denmark. The town was situated in territory which subsequently became part of the German Empire and is known as Schleswig-Holstein. They came to this country with their father who with his family settled in Kansas City in the year 1880 and there established a home; August was then about sixteen years of age and Frank nine. August had attended school in Germany; shortly after the family came to Kansas City he secured employment with the Kansas City Star as office boy and clerk; he was subsequently advanced in different positions in the business office of the paper until he became business manager. At the time of the publication in question he was the general manager of the Star.

The elder Seested on coming to the United States took out his first papers and in due course became a naturalized citizen. August assumed that he became a citizen through the naturalization of his father. In that belief he served on juries, voted at elections, and otherwise comported himself as one having all the rights, privileges and duties of citizenship. In 1916, however, persons offering to register as voters, if not native born, were required in this State, as perhaps elsewhere, to furnish documentary proof of naturalization. Mr. Seested found upon investigation that his father’s naturalization had not been completed until after he, August, had become twenty-one years of age. He thereupon took prompt steps to establish for himself the legal status of citizen. This seems to have been accomplished by July 9, 1917,

*568 Frank Seested attended school in Kansas City — “went through the Public School.” Plis first and only employment, covering forty years, has been with the Kansas City Star.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.W.2d 1045, 326 Mo. 559, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seested-v-post-printing-publishing-co-mo-1930.